Ethics and Justice for the Environment

Regular price €186.00
A01=Adrian Armstrong
Active Civil Rights Movement
Amartya Sen
Animal Ethics
Animal Kingdom
Annex Iii
Author_Adrian Armstrong
Biodiversity
Category=QDTQ
Climate Change
Conservation
Deep Ecology Movement
DNA Bank
Energy Sources
Environmental Ethics
Environmental Issues
Environmental Justice
Environmental Justice Movement
Environmental studies
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Follow
Good Life
Human Beings
Human Kind
Leopold's Land Ethic
Love Canal Homeowners Association
Martha Nussbaum
Moral Considerability
Natural World
Nussbaum Capabilities Approach
Part Iii
Representational Justice
Sheep Scab Mite
St Catherine's Hill
Sustainability
Sustainable development
Warren County

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415509039
  • Weight: 690g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jun 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Examining the issues of ethics and justice as they apply to the environment, this book starts from the observation that the parallel expositions of environmental ethics and environmental justice appear to have few points of contact. Environmental justice is highly politicized and concerned with human access to the environment and the unequal exposure to environmental pollution. It grew out of the US civil rights movement, the liberal tradition of rights, and Rawls’ description of justice as fairness. It is thus almost exclusively anthropocentric, and does not address the question of justice for the environment. By contrast environmental ethical studies are a wide ranging collection of approaches that are concerned with caring for the earth, and the justifications for it, but rarely consider the issue of justice. Although the two movements do not come together at the theoretical level, they do so at the grass roots activist level. An essential component of this study is thus to consider both the issues of grass roots action, and the application of the methods to actual case studies. This book finds a common ground between these two strands and so to develop a unified statement of justice for the environment that includes the insights of both approaches, particularly based on the 'capability ideas of justice' developed by Martha Nussbaum. 
Adrian Armstrong is Honorary Professor in the School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of Birmingham, UK, and Visiting Professor in the Department of Geography at the University of Loughborough, UK.